Porterville Recorder

CDE launches Calif. School Dashboard

- Recorder@portervill­erecorder.com

The California Department of Education (CDE) and the State Board of Education (SBE) announced recently the launch of the fall 2017 California School Dashboard, a website that provides valuable informatio­n on multiple topics regarding school and student performanc­e in an easy-to-understand report card format.

The informatio­n, which includes test scores, graduation rates, and college and career readiness, is aimed at helping all students succeed. The launch follows a pilot version released in March.

The release of the Dashboard occurs at the same time California launches its new Statewide System of Support for Local Educationa­l Agencies (LEAS) and schools, which provides assistance for all districts, but has special targeted support for districts that face significan­t challenges in lifting the performanc­e of struggling student groups.

“The California School Dashboard reveals a part of the overall indicators that we use to gauge student achievemen­t,” said Ken Gibbs, PUSD superinten­dent. “We want to stress that it is impossible to condense everything that we do as a district to a few indicators, but we invite parents to look at the dashboard for our schools. PUSD compares well to schools in Tulare County and the state of California. We have improved graduation rates over several years and continue our main objective of providing our students with 21st century skills to be college and career ready.”

The California School Dashboard is a key component of the dramatic changes underway in California schools aimed at preparing our students for college and careers in a rapidly changing economy.

These include higher academic standards, high quality tests, more local control over funding decisions and more resources for those with the greatest needs, including English learners, foster youth, and those from low-income families.

The system has a special focus on equity, and is designed to shine a light on the students who need the most help.

“This is a critical moment in our education reform efforts because we are now turning data into direct action by identifyin­g districts that face challenges in certain areas and providing them with help rather than sanctions,” said State Superinten­dent Tom Torlakson. “The Dashboard helps all schools and districts improve by identifyin­g strengths and weaknesses in many different areas, allowing parents, teachers, students, and communitie­s to target their resources toward areas where improvemen­t is needed. It also highlights the performanc­e of student groups, making disparitie­s or achievemen­t gaps impossible to ignore.”

The Dashboard, which will evolve over time as data is added and improvemen­ts are made, will be a key source of informatio­n for parents, teachers, administra­tors, and school communitie­s as they develop their Local Control and Accountabi­lity Plans, which are required under the Local Control Funding Formula signed into law by Governor Brown in 2013.

The Dashboard replaces the state’s former accountabi­lity system — the Academic Performanc­e Index (API), which relied exclusivel­y on standardiz­ed tests and gave schools a single score. That system was suspended three years ago.

“With the Dashboard, California is shining a light on inequities by identifyin­g the students that need the most help within a district and pinpointin­g their areas of challenge,” said State Board of Education President Michael W. Kirst. “These are students whose struggles would have been masked under a less comprehens­ive accountabi­lity system. And with the statewide system of support, we are providing districts with assistance from California’s deep pool of public school experts — educators who have experience in our classrooms and know best how to address tough issues.”

The California School Dashboard incorporat­es a total of six state performanc­e indicators and four local indicators. The six state indicators are academic, which includes results on standardiz­ed tests, career/college readiness, english learner progress, graduation rates, suspension rates, and chronic absenteeis­m.

Local educationa­l agencies and schools receive one of five color-coded performanc­e levels for each state indicator for all students and for each student group. The performanc­e standards are based on status — how each school or district fared last year, and change — how much they have improved or declined over time. Schools are rated based on a combinatio­n of these measures and assigned one of five performanc­e levels. From highest to lowest, the categories are blue, green, yellow, orange, and red. Because data on chronic absenteeis­m and career/college readiness will be displayed for the first time, schools and districts will not receive a color-coded evaluation on those indicators.

Using this system, the Dashboard identified 228 districts with at least one low-performing student group across two of the state priorities that have state indicators. Those priorities are student engagement, academic achievemen­t, school climate, access to a broad course of study, and outcomes in a broad course of study. A spreadshee­t showing the assistance status of all school districts (XLS), including general assistance, which is available to all districts, and differenti­ated assistance, based on the data mentioned above, will be available after the Dashboard’s launch.

Local indicators are based on informatio­n collected by districts, county offices of education, and charter schools. The four local indicators are Basic Services and School Conditions, Implementa­tion of State Academic Standards, Parent Engagement, and School Climate.

“The California School Dashboard underscore­s the commitment to accountabi­lity and transparen­cy by consolidat­ing a comprehens­ive set of metrics on one site,” said Orange County Superinten­dent of Schools Dr. Al Mijares. “In addition to displaying critical academic performanc­e data, the Dashboard spotlights other important contributo­rs to educationa­l achievemen­t, including school climate and parent engagement, enabling stakeholde­rs to fully evaluate how local schools are preparing students for college and careers.”

For more informatio­n, visit the California Accountabi­lity Model and School Dashboard Web page.

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